United Caribbean Trust (UCT)

In theTukuyu
ATBS -Tanzania Apostle David is training the untrained
pastors from the Hadzabe tribe this tribe is an un reached
tribes according to Joshua projects and the ATBS Tukuya Center
is very vital in the area.

“These are not witch doctors they are
the Hadzabe tribe. these are church members dancing"

Apostle David Akondowi

The Hadza, or Hadzabe, are an indigenous ethnic
group in north-central Tanzania, living around Lake Eyasi in the
central Rift Valley and in the neighboring Serengeti Plateau. The
Hadza number just under 1,000

Some 300–400 Hadza live as hunter-gatherers, much
as their ancestors have for tens of thousands of years. They are
among the last hunter-gatherers in the world. The Hadza are not
closely genetically related to any other people.

While traditionally classified with the Khoisan
languages, primarily because it has clicks, the Hadza language appears
to be an isolate, unrelated to any other.

As descendants of Tanzania's aboriginal hunter-gatherer
population, they have probably occupied their current territory
for thousands of years, with relatively little modification to their
basic way of life until the past hundred years.

The Hadza's way of life is highly
conservative. Huts have been built in this style for as long
as records have been kept.

The foraging Hadza exploited
the same foods using many of the same techniques they do today,
though game was more plentiful because farmers had not yet
begun directly encroaching on their lands. Some early reports
describe the Hadza as having chiefs or big men, but they were
probably mistaken; more reliable accounts portray early 20th
century Hadza as egalitarian, as they are today.

They also lived in similarly
sized camps, used the same tools, built houses in the same
style and had similar religious beliefs